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Vol 7, No 1 (2005)


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Editorial

Electronic Health Records Should Support Clinical Research

John Powell, Iain Buchan

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 14); 7(1):e4

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One aspect of electronic care records which has received little attention is the potential benefit to clinical research. Electronic records could facilitate new interfaces between care and research environments, leading to great improvements in the scope and efficiency of research. Benefits range from systematically generating hypotheses for research to undertaking entire studies based only on electronic record data. Researchers and research managers must engage with electronic record...

Original Papers

Comparing the Efficacy of Two Internet-Based, Computer-Tailored Smoking Cessation Programs: A Randomized Trial

Jean-François Etter

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 08); 7(1):e2

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BACKGROUND: Online computer-tailored smoking cessation programs have not yet been compared directly. OBJECTIVE: To compare the efficacy of two Internet-based, computer-tailored smoking cessation programs. METHODS: Randomized controlled trial conducted in 2003-2004. Visitors to a smoking cessation website were randomly assigned to either an original online, interactive smoking cessation program or to a modified program. Both programs consisted of tailored, personalized counseling letters...

Challenges of Internet Recruitment: A Case Study with Disappointing Results

Malcolm Koo, Harvey Skinner

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 19); 7(1):e6

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BACKGROUND: The Internet provides tremendous opportunities for innovative research, but few publications on the use of the Internet for recruiting study participants exist. This paper summarizes our experiences from 2 studies in which we attempted to recruit teenagers on the Internet for a questionnaire study to evaluate a smoking-cessation website. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate strategies of recruiting teenagers for the evaluation of a smoking-cessation website through the Internet. METHODS: In...

Usage and Longitudinal Effectiveness of a Web-Based Self-Help Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Program for Panic Disorder

Peter Farvolden, Eilenna Denisoff, Peter Selby, R Michael Bagby, Laura Rudy

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 26); 7(1):e7

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BACKGROUND: Anxiety disorders are common problems that result in enormous suffering and economic costs. The efficacy of Web-based self-help approaches for anxiety disorders has been demonstrated in a number of controlled trials. However, there is little data regarding the patterns of use and effectiveness of freely available Web-based interventions outside the context of controlled trials. OBJECTIVE: To examine the use and longitudinal effectiveness of a freely available, 12-session,...

Pilot Study of an Internet Patient-Physician Communication Tool for Heart Failure Disease Management

Robert C Wu, Diego Delgado, Jeannine Costigan, Jane MacIver, Heather Ross

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 26); 7(1):e8

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BACKGROUND: Internet disease management has the promise of improving care in patients with heart failure but evidence supporting its use is limited. We have designed a Heart Failure Internet Communication Tool (HFICT), allowing patients to enter messages for clinicians, as well as their daily symptoms, weight, blood pressure and heart rate. Clinicians review the information on the same day and provide feedback. OBJECTIVE: This pilot study evaluated the feasibility and patients'...

The Role of an Online Community for People With a Rare Disease: Content Analysis of Messages Posted on a Primary Biliary Cirrhosis Mailinglist

Judith N Lasker, Ellen D Sogolow, Rebecca R Sharim

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 31); 7(1):e10

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BACKGROUND: This study focuses on the role of an Internet-based group for people who have an autoimmune liver disease, primary biliary cirrhosis. Primary biliary cirrhosis is a relatively rare disease, affects primarily women in their 40's and older, and is not well understood. The PBCers Organization (PBC stands for primary biliary cirrhosis) provides electronic mailinglists (listservs) and informational resources for those with primary biliary cirrhosis. OBJECTIVES: (1) to identify the...

Review

What Is eHealth (3): A Systematic Review of Published Definitions

Hans Oh, Carlos Rizo, Murray Enkin, Alejandro Jadad

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Feb 24); 7(1):e1

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CONTEXT: The term eHealth is widely used by many individuals, academic institutions, professional bodies, and funding organizations. It has become an accepted neologism despite the lack of an agreed-upon clear or precise definition. We believe that communication among the many individuals and organizations that use the term could be improved by comprehensive data about the range of meanings encompassed by the term. OBJECTIVE: To report the results of a systematic review of published,...

What Is eHealth (4): A Scoping Exercise to Map the Field

Claudia Pagliari, David Sloan, Peter Gregor, Frank Sullivan, Don Detmer, James P Kahan, Wija Oortwijn, Steve MacGillivray

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 31); 7(1):e9

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BACKGROUND: Lack of consensus on the meaning of eHealth has led to uncertainty among academics, policymakers, providers and consumers. This project was commissioned in light of the rising profile of eHealth on the international policy agenda and the emerging UK National Programme for Information Technology (now called Connecting for Health) and related developments in the UK National Health Service. OBJECTIVES: To map the emergence and scope of eHealth as a topic and to identify its place...

Viewpoint

The Emergence of National Electronic Health Record Architectures in the United States and Australia: Models, Costs, and Questions

Tracy D Gunter, Nicolas P Terry

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 14); 7(1):e3

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Emerging electronic health record models present numerous challenges to health care systems, physicians, and regulators. This article provides explanation of some of the reasons driving the development of the electronic health record, describes two national electronic health record models (currently developing in the United States and Australia) and one distributed, personal model. The US and Australian models are contrasted in their different architectures (“pull” versus...

The Law of Attrition

Gunther Eysenbach

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 31); 7(1):e11

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In an ongoing effort of this Journal to develop and further the theories, models, and best practices around eHealth research, this paper argues for the need for a “science of attrition”, that is, a need to develop models for discontinuation of eHealth applications and the related phenomenon of participants dropping out of eHealth trials. What I call “law of attrition” here is the observation that in any eHealth trial a substantial proportion of users drop out before...

Tutorial

The Internet and Clinical Trials: Background, Online Resources, Examples and Issues

James Paul, Rachael Seib, Todd Prescott

J Med Internet Res 2005 (Mar 16); 7(1):e5

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Both the Internet and clinical trials were significant developments in the latter half of the twentieth century: the Internet revolutionized global communications and the randomized controlled trial provided a means to conduct an unbiased comparison of two or more treatments. Large multicenter trials are often burdened with an extensive development time and considerable expense, as well as significant challenges in obtaining, backing up and analyzing large amounts of data. Alongside the...